"Unorganized" became a word in the early 19th century, derived from the prefix "un-" meaning "not" and the word "organized," to describe something that lacks organization or structure.
Yes, the word "unorganized" is a common English adjective used to describe something that is not properly arranged, planned, or structured.
The negative prefix is un-. This make the word unorganized.
The prefix in the word "become" is "be-".
The root word of "become" is "come."
No, "become" is not in the past tense. The past tense of "become" is "became."
Yes, the word "unorganized" is a common English adjective used to describe something that is not properly arranged, planned, or structured.
Unorganized
unorganized, disorganized, disorderly.
unordered unorganized
The negative prefix is un-. This make the word unorganized.
messy, unorganized, untidy, anything like that.
Let loose, chaos, unorganized
The word 'unorganized' could be translated to Spanish as 'desorganizado'. It has the same meaning as the word in English, it's used to describe someone or something that doesn't follows an order or that is all over the place.
The choler of the unorganized crowd turned toward the local businesses.
It negates whatever word it's before, so unorganized means not organized.
The negative prefix is un-. This make the word unorganized.
The population of Unorganized Kenora District is 7,031.